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regular-article-logo Saturday, 11 May 2024

RBI to front-load rate hikes to curb inflation

Indian economy poised to shrug off the modest tapering of growth momentum in the first quarter of 2022-23

Our Bureau, Reuters Mumbai Published 17.09.22, 01:19 AM
Reserve Bank of India

Reserve Bank of India File Photo

The Reserve Bank of India said on Friday it will have to front-load its monetary policy to fight stubborn inflation and shield medium-term growth in the world’s fifth-largest economy.

Inflation in India has remained above the apex bank’s tolerance level since January, prompting it to raise interest rates by a total of 140 basis points in the current cycle. The bank is widely expected to hike rates by another 25 to 50 basis points at its next meeting at the end of this month.

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“At this critical juncture, monetary policy has to perform the role of nominal anchor for the economy as it charts a new growth trajectory,” the RBI said in an article on the state of the economy that was included in its monthly bulletin.

“Front-loading of monetary policy actions can keep inflation expectations firmly anchored and reduce the medium-term growth sacrifice.”

The RBI said the August 2022 inflation reading of 7 per cent was in line with its prognosis that inflation has peaked in April and will grudgingly edge down over time There was, however, a resurgence of food price pressures, mainly stemming from cereals, even as fuel and core components such as transport and manufacturing provided a modest measure of respite, the bank said.

“We maintain our view that inflation momentum should ease in Q3 and turn mildly negative in Q4. With base effects being favourable in the second half of 2022-23, inflation should moderate, although upside risks are in the air.”

The Indian economy is poised to shrug off the modest tapering of growth momentum in the first quarter of 2022-23, it added. Aggregate demand is firm and poised to expand further as the festival season sets in.

Domestic financial conditions remain supportive of growth impulses, the article noted. It also forecast the country’s current account deficit to remain within 3 per cent of the gross domestic product in the current fiscal year to March 2023.

“With portfolio flows returning and foreign direct investment remaining strong, this order of deficit is eminently financeable,” it said.

Sensex tanks

Fears of global recession amid aggressive rate hikes by central banks led to a bloodbath on the bourses on Friday with the benchmark Sensex plummeting more than 1093 points and investor wealth eroding almost Rs 6.19 lakh crore.

Investors went on a selling spree spooked by the prospect of a 100 basis points hike in interest rates by the US Federal Reserve next week . The Sensex on Friday opened in the red at 59585.72 points and slid to a low of 58687.17 — a drop of nearly 1,247 points after which it settled at 58840.79 down 1,093.22 points or 1.82 per cent.

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